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Potent Indians Scalp Troy, 35-7
Southern
<5:1 ii'orr'iivSi
DAI LY
TROJAN
VOL. Xl!X
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1957
NO. 35
Students Crowd Row for Flapper Day; Game Not So Joyou
s
51,923 Dejected Fans See Rout
By GARRY SHORT
Don Clark had his one game win streak smashed to bits Saturday as Stanford's Indians scalped the Trojans for the third straight year. 35-7, before 51.923 disappointed SC Homecoming fans who witnessed the ambush in the Coliseum.
This Saturday, in the same arena, SC tangles with Oregon's Ducks who will be trying to nail down a Ro^e Bowl bid by a victory over the Trojans. And Oregon will come into the game stinging from a 13-6 upset at the hands of the Washington Huskies, too.
About the only bright point to i the otherwise bleak afternoon Saturday whs the lact that 51.923 showed up. the largest college crowd in the Coliseum this year.
Worst Licking Clark’s crew, for the first time ¡his .'ear. were routed. It was the worst licking SC has ever taken from the Ind ans. Previous high was in 1919 w hen Stanford waltzed to a 34-13 win, also in the Coliseum.
Throughout most of the first half Saturday, the Trojans impressed the gathering with the brilliance that gave them their first win of the season a week ago against Washington.
Never in lianic They were never in the ball ”ame in the second half. Stanford coach Chuck Tayloi substituted freely. It seemed to Trojan fans that whenever an Indian player got his whito jersey a little dirty. Taylor would pull him and send in another player with a sparkling white uniform.
All ihe statistics leaned heavily toward the Farmers.
★ ★ ★ Mighty Trojan Frosh Beaten By California
ana
Re
HOMECOMING RECAP
Indents, Alumni Pack Ambassador
Bv GARRY SHORT
\Y
d I
; a in >mec nd
>1 he Olili
drag
heel ic 1 \V>i
hut fun-
down. n >p of the uge halo
he Indian head at the totem pole sported a depicting a supposed-y “pure” Stanford in its aid-to-ithletes program.
Winning Ilecorations Other prize-winning fraternity louse decorations we re Pi Kappa Vlpha, most beautiful; Sigma 'hi. most svmlxilic: and Delta
Tt le ov eri low crowd became so Chi. most hun îorous.
laig. » l)y ;3< 1 ] 1 hat Homecoming j In sorority i L-eimpetition, Alpha
iman Lee 1 ta lner was fore- Chi Omega wi in Most Beautiful.
Cri t o i un to ll< del officials and Delta Delta Delta took Most
ask tor another halln Kim. Symbolic, and Pi Phi w a 1 k e d
lusic making of away with Mo st Original.
Fra! ik DeYol til led the bill b. au- Pi Phis, vvhe ise decoration was
tilul Iv and She! llev Mamie con- almost destroy ed by lire Friday-
troll ed His Men from ’heir usu- morning, sent all of its girls into
n 1 i e \ce ngs and proved i double time ac tion to reconstruct roduct by judging
1.1* Minims Warded
I.on
finance, who at tail-. Dr. Ft: ed lovely 19. Theta Lynn Court.
Tau Kappa and Pi Reta announced as ners at the
Frid
Blaze
ded Mb E orati-
< aii^e
: to I
noon.
I nknown
ilaine Stewart, cause of
iks
He
Fp
n irate Phi Sorority Sweepstakes dance, but lination of the re g officials discoi a Phi Reta woui ler total th
upon
Valuable Points
TKF
VV 11
•A 111)
11 am ilia Flappe
the Pi
ippf
Phis
Dav
Pi Phi president, the the blaze is still unknown.
“About 5 a.m. Friday, some nen from the Zeta Reta Tau house noticed our decoration in flames," she said. “They were joined b\ men from several of the houses who ran over, pushed [he huge decoration over and smothered the flames. It’s just lucky they saw it when they did. uld have reached the house." ke all the others on the Row. lecoration was constructed inflammable crepe paper had been approved by the department.
Large W hite C ross e Pi Phi entry, on the ecoming theme. “Troydi-in Sports." depicted a laige
It c
w it Ii and
Hon
the Flapper Day Parade and! Rally in front of the Theta Xi fraternity house Friday night.
Close to 2500 students and alumni jammed the Row for the spirited parade and bonfire rally. The. police department closed 28th Street to traffic for the occasion.
Tiny Space Ships
Many rooters had balloons filled with helium gas. And these balloons, at the end of long strings, rose in the air giving the weird impression of what hundreds of tiny space ships might look like. The unusualness of the impression was further intensifi- i ed by ihe bright spotlights imported from movie studios to illuminate the parade and rally j
The annual theme of Flappei j Day was the bold and boisterous ’20s. And entries featured anti-1 que autos, the Charleston and skits ribbing prohibition days.
Too Much Duplication
Theta Xi ran the parade re-1 markably well even though it permitted twice as many entries as it should have. There was too
Rut exuberant Trojan rooters didn’i seem io care as they pushed and nudged each other} (Continued on Page Four)
Official Views Row Drinking
Dud Johnson, IFC adviser, has gone on record saying that some day he would like to see the drinking restrictions on Si"s fraternities removed.
*‘I would like to see the day come when drinking is i»er-niitted in the fraternit y houses, but I do not feel their moral standards permit it at I his time,” he said.
Johnson made this comment after Virgil Schaeffer, Phi Sigma Kappa member, presented a recommendation to form a committee to investigate the possible use of alcoholic beverages in the fraternity houses.
Dennis Fagerhult approved the committee recommendation and t he issue will be brought up again at the next IFC meeting, Thursday.
The council passed a motion to support Christmas house decorations sponsored by ATO, •Johnson said.
Double Feature Set for Reading
Undergraduate English students Jim Sousa end Rill Pitkin will compare Stephen Crane and Ernest Hemingway in the English department's Noon Readings today in 129 FH.
“We will compare the feeling, thought and style of these two authors," Sousa said.
Aim for Summit Urged by Rabbi
Tt
on t air. i Care
Thr becau detea tin
Indians rambled 339 yards, e ground and through the mipared t.o 262 for SC. The led in first downs, 21-15.
Blowing Fire > Indians, still blowing tire se of a, pair of extra point (s that has probably cost it Rose Row 1 nod. hooted every cf its extra points against
the vaunted SC Trobabes : day alternoon. 13-9, just a while before the varsity f Stanford in the Coliseum freshman game was he Rerkeley.
The SC Trobabes took an 2-0 lead when the Cubs’ Segale centered the hall n the end zone on a punt att K»vo\ »‘red Fumble
Cal came back with a s quarter touchdown and c< sion to hold a 7-2 lead ii halftime gun. .John Blaylock fast Cub left halfback, wenl yards for the score. It was by a recovered fumble. Qu back Jim Ferguson convert
The junior Golden Bears into a 13-2 lead midway i
The
we i n tl
third Ernie on a : it was
quarter, when t Reese scampered lick double revet an SC mistake tl miserable
ight 19 v
Ac;
Dr. Israel Chodos, rabbi for ; the Congregation of Sinai of Los I Angeles was the speaker for the i regular Morning Worship Service | Sunday in Rovard Auditorium. His topic was “The Quest for Self-Fulfillment.’’
In his sermon. Rabbi Chodos | urged the congregation to decide “whence you have come and whither you will go."
He said. “Man must strive to lift himself to his highest to what he is capable of doing ; the summit!"
'Ideal' is Disappearing
The Rabbi discussed the fact that the word “ideal" seems to be i hading from our modern-day vocabulary. “Recause we cannot define it in definite terms, we tend to ignore it," Dr. Chodos said.
“It is a soaring word, one that is intangible, but an ideal should be that a person strives to ful-fill the promise of his potential-1 ities." he explained.
“An ideal is a magnet which : beckons and every being must endow himself to respond, but not be driven. There should be a quest for truth, for good and for the beautiful.” he said.
“We must restore to America its soul.” he added, “and fulfill ourselves as individual human beings.”
Rabbi Chodos said we should never see ourselves as a good
been with b u t
machine that has never used. We should not stop “earthbound complacency, strive forever heavenward.”
“Life is a being and a becoming, not a having and wanting."
“Rise to the highest promise within you. Strive for. reach for a star and if you don't reach it. there may still be stardust on your shoulders,” the rabbi said. “Sanctify your lives by the most real things ideals, and nourish your hungered spirits with the great religion.”
Many Participants “And may God set me on Thy highest places, should he the ideal striven for by every person.” he concluded.
Med. Honorary
Q #s I» r
*/WUl\ J
Pre-medical students opportunity to join A!pl Ion Delta, national pre honorary, which will me day in 252 Sc.
Reouirerr.ents foe men in this society are the tio.i of 43 units and a 3 average.
“Many fine programs in~ physicians and persor inent in the medical fir*ld
,psi-
tical
hership x>mple-
) grade
featur-: promare
ig planned I I Kermit Oh
t lie
presi
future
lent.
A hustling and determined Stanford line roared through SC’s senior-less line as they might through a cube of butter.
Led by a powerful quarterback in Jackie Douglas, who Taylor ! rates every hit as good as John ■ Rrodie. the Indians ground out all of their TDs except the final one. a jump pass from Douglas to Cris Rurford shortly before the end of the third quarter.
Law Student
Douglas, a Stanford law student from Santa Monica, completed eight of 13 passes for 79 of Stanford’s 85 yards through the air länes.
The 20-year-old senior, w ho is ; also a fine tennis player, demonstrated his supurb ability on one play that led to Stanford's first TD.
A fourth down situation on SC's 10-yard line. One yard to go for a first down. Douglas rolled back to pass, all the way hack to the 20. and became hemmed in bv three separate SC players.
Scored to Si\
In hurry-up fashion, he shook off Phil Dehovsky, Rod Hurn-enuik and Walt Gurasich and scooted-to the SC six before he was finally brought down.
From this point, Rick McMillen easily stepped into the end zone on the next play giving Stanford its first six pointer.
SC was not to be denied, however, as a Willie Wood-led squad took the kick-off. roared 76-yards , in 11 plays and kicked the con-(Continued on Page Four)
the play, kick.
Final Quarter TD
A desperate Trobabe pas.« attack in the final qua: brought the or.lv touchdown Coach Marv Goux’s crew, scoring play was a three-; pass from A1 Prukop to Lu Hayes. Carl Skvarna convert Next game on the Trol schedule is UCLA, one ol weakest of the typically-^ Rrubabe teams. Le>«> than
The
men turned out Westwood this SC freshmen arf the Bruins easil.
fc
the
d tl
favored t(
Science Meet To Feature Caltech Man
Bn
at
Tec
T
ai
COMMERCE DEAN'S ECONOMIC LETTER
tion “Hall The TKF two-story li In front* of S" * >rd-v\ ield
ed
pe
tom
night All !
cross u ground tl with th diool. for ike Ti the
ig T
1 front ol ìe length c e words “F ■ country -ojans.” awards filiere presen
a blue f their ir self, They
house 1 ed at
Four Percent Lag in incomes Estimated
Gibbs Schools Offer National Scholarships
Two n:
ips
>1- li
der and pr<
retan;
awards
New
Provi
lools tor ils are loc >rk. Monti ice. R.I.
M. C
dent
the
di dates. E; have an r
Winners a Scholarship
La^is of coll
personal an
Cdt lull' till.
tentialities
Hess.
end two can-ndidale must endorsement isen by the ittee on t h e .demie record,
a i lei qu all lilted a net t>u-
Pages Ouster To Be Pondered
Lawrence C. Locklcy, dean of t^e School of Commerce, said in his monthly economic letter that in order to live a.: vvell this fall as we did last fall, we will have to have about a four per cent increase in income.
“At least that repi’esents an arithmetical conclusion." he said. “Rut there is a joker in the statement. With a lack of increased production during this period, a.id wilh an increase in population, there is not enough to go around 1o let us live just as vvell as we did last fall.” Increases Won’t Delp Dean Lockley said that any to increase consumer ! to the point that the in prices will he merely increases the if inflation and does* not the consuming position
attempt
incomes
i ncrcHso
matched
amount
improve
rn
uld
vision freshi ie eon i 11 the 1 . p tu.ler.t ave- h
ù»Uonal cdjli aw aid oí S50U. Ihe AMss meetuií
tilt
whether the en men’s nued will h \MS meetii i in the lm ’ Lounge, ve been cut rent lack c i.auis. AMS ed a mot i .•in at the
nib.
.lie.
t pur-
The only " av this can be overcome is if some consumers get an increase that others do not £;et, or if some get a greater increase than others. Then the;-, can overcome the of increasi He further ex pi is the stead.' upw ; a 20-year period ir conies that has coi
averse influ-t price ’evel. ined that it d surge over consumer in-ributed most
heavily to our inch-by-uich ui-
flation.
In line with this, the Federal ! Reserve Ranks have made money ! tighter for business enterprise without striking directly at this primary cause of inflation. The resulting slowing down of business activity will probably decrease our excessive consumer wage levels.
"Rut." he added, “it is something like trying to treat a sprained ankle In spraining the other ankle loo, so that the pa-tienl will limp evenly!” Commenting on the level of business activity this fall. Dean Lockley said there seems to have I been a prevailing sentiment of pessimism concerning the business outlook. It has become so great that during October there w as a noticeable sharp break in j the ««lock ma ket—without any apparent cause.
Almost Full Employment lie noted that there Ls practically full employment now and thei«e has l)een no tall-off to j speak of in the rate of produc- j tion Retail salts have continued ! to climb and there are many in-deations of solidity in our cur- ; rent economic scene.
“But on the oilier hand, we can sec a leveling oft in some ol our unportant diagnostic in* 1
dexes. Money is light, but been made tight by the national action of the Federal Reserve Roard.” he writes.
According to Lockley, during th. year our population increased by slightl; more than 3.000.000. Apparently a larger pooulation got along on the same volume of goods, but paid a higher price for this standard of living.
A second question raised f
Official
MoSict
All students who have deferred tuition accounts are reminded that the first payment is due on Nov. 15. except for those students registered under Public Law 550. Payments made after Nov. 15 will be subject to the $5.00 late payment fee unless an extension has been granted by the Ollice iif Deterred Tuition. < lie* t.s-and money orders tor the exact amount are acceptable by mail or in person at the Office of Deferred Tuition.
( ash payments must be made at 'he Bursar's Of fire.
it has ! Dean Lockley in his monthly lot -inter- ter Ls whether or not we can have peace in the labor field.
lie said that the rccent Senate investigating committee hearings
' have uncovered ; deal of corruption highly placed unioi through these hear I come public knovvl ery bribe paid to f officers was paid 1 tative of manager?'
“If there is to I* in <*ir present stat ment-union relatioi to be bilateral.”
\\ hat W Lockley said, ‘
I suspect, is si from union Icadc management ma; r:oi of violent among labor ore Still another ; by Lockley in hi tegration.
Dean Lockley he has travelled th * South and of some 20 to 2 seen a coitseque the attitude of n servative middle
it h th,
a rep
neat
the Negro a challenge to remedy the neglect of the past. This attitude pointed a slow way toward improvement—but a very sure way,” he said.
Can't Be Mitigated “My point is that an inequity of long standing can rarely be mitigated in a short space of time. And the inequity was in the process of mitigation before ihe decision of the Supreme integration issue.”
Dr. Harrison of geochemistry nia Institute of speak on “Science, and Foreign Policy and Gown Thursday This will be the nual Lecture of th«5 Chapter of the F American Scientist sored by the Ameri ist Association, Soc cial Responsibility and the Friends O Legislation.
Civilian <
The Federatior Scientists, founded in i in 1916 under the origins of Federation of Atomic lists, instigated the light and keep atomic energy civilian control. This wr to the establishment of t Mahon or Atomic Energ;
As a scientist of con Dr. Brow n has publicly d his concern over tlie gen* lects of H-Bomb falloul particular reference to tl
Tr
d An-
Ange
mtrol
itti
\m
?cia
■tic
dene 25 i>
» of
«UC <
itera
rilic
leukem if The S ture he evaluati
î. In iturda
Lockley - Need
What vv
C ourt on he said.
“Probably the liberty has l>een some time, 2nd has been opened
need, ostión i how a pest rife
uched
civ ¡1 k for ; Box out a demagogues and in the
ause c set ba a n dora to let
s letter was in*
■>: pituite
ined that a bit in a pei h>d
5 hr* hdl
•liange in the con—
“More and more of the b pw.it of tiie South was seeing
ui
group of political both in the North South,” he arlrieel.
Rut even more important, according to Lockley, is that in thi.- day e>f nuclear warfare, “the United States must continue to be one nation."
Not Too Formidable
In regard to the current Sputnik scare, Dean Loci.'ey feels the launching by Russia of a iiiis-'ile took much of the news and piopaganda valu-c- out of the l.'Uiu-liiiiii.s \v e had planned ui connection with the International Geophysical Year, but that it represents no more formidable development than our own.
scie ter.
Establishes Sdencc
Refore establishing geocher istry as one of the recogniz geological sciences at CalTei in 1951, Dr. Rrown was direct of the University of Chicage Institute for Nuclear Studi« During the war he served on t plutonium project at the I nive sity of Chicago and as assista director of the Clinton I^ibor tories at Oak Ridge. Tenn.
Studies Earth's Composition
Dr. Rrown has studied the a-
composite meteorite? piling dat the Intel Year.
Tickets ture mav
b\
binili
dei
diti
t. Caliform i per peisoil

Potent Indians Scalp Troy, 35-7
Southern
<5:1 ii'orr'iivSi
DAI LY
TROJAN
VOL. Xl!X
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1957
NO. 35
Students Crowd Row for Flapper Day; Game Not So Joyou
s
51,923 Dejected Fans See Rout
By GARRY SHORT
Don Clark had his one game win streak smashed to bits Saturday as Stanford's Indians scalped the Trojans for the third straight year. 35-7, before 51.923 disappointed SC Homecoming fans who witnessed the ambush in the Coliseum.
This Saturday, in the same arena, SC tangles with Oregon's Ducks who will be trying to nail down a Ro^e Bowl bid by a victory over the Trojans. And Oregon will come into the game stinging from a 13-6 upset at the hands of the Washington Huskies, too.
About the only bright point to i the otherwise bleak afternoon Saturday whs the lact that 51.923 showed up. the largest college crowd in the Coliseum this year.
Worst Licking Clark’s crew, for the first time ¡his .'ear. were routed. It was the worst licking SC has ever taken from the Ind ans. Previous high was in 1919 w hen Stanford waltzed to a 34-13 win, also in the Coliseum.
Throughout most of the first half Saturday, the Trojans impressed the gathering with the brilliance that gave them their first win of the season a week ago against Washington.
Never in lianic They were never in the ball ”ame in the second half. Stanford coach Chuck Tayloi substituted freely. It seemed to Trojan fans that whenever an Indian player got his whito jersey a little dirty. Taylor would pull him and send in another player with a sparkling white uniform.
All ihe statistics leaned heavily toward the Farmers.
★ ★ ★ Mighty Trojan Frosh Beaten By California
ana
Re
HOMECOMING RECAP
Indents, Alumni Pack Ambassador
Bv GARRY SHORT
\Y
d I
; a in >mec nd
>1 he Olili
drag
heel ic 1 \V>i
hut fun-
down. n >p of the uge halo
he Indian head at the totem pole sported a depicting a supposed-y “pure” Stanford in its aid-to-ithletes program.
Winning Ilecorations Other prize-winning fraternity louse decorations we re Pi Kappa Vlpha, most beautiful; Sigma 'hi. most svmlxilic: and Delta
Tt le ov eri low crowd became so Chi. most hun îorous.
laig. » l)y ;3< 1 ] 1 hat Homecoming j In sorority i L-eimpetition, Alpha
iman Lee 1 ta lner was fore- Chi Omega wi in Most Beautiful.
Cri t o i un to ll< del officials and Delta Delta Delta took Most
ask tor another halln Kim. Symbolic, and Pi Phi w a 1 k e d
lusic making of away with Mo st Original.
Fra! ik DeYol til led the bill b. au- Pi Phis, vvhe ise decoration was
tilul Iv and She! llev Mamie con- almost destroy ed by lire Friday-
troll ed His Men from ’heir usu- morning, sent all of its girls into
n 1 i e \ce ngs and proved i double time ac tion to reconstruct roduct by judging
1.1* Minims Warded
I.on
finance, who at tail-. Dr. Ft: ed lovely 19. Theta Lynn Court.
Tau Kappa and Pi Reta announced as ners at the
Frid
Blaze
ded Mb E orati-
< aii^e
: to I
noon.
I nknown
ilaine Stewart, cause of
iks
He
Fp
n irate Phi Sorority Sweepstakes dance, but lination of the re g officials discoi a Phi Reta woui ler total th
upon
Valuable Points
TKF
VV 11
•A 111)
11 am ilia Flappe
the Pi
ippf
Phis
Dav
Pi Phi president, the the blaze is still unknown.
“About 5 a.m. Friday, some nen from the Zeta Reta Tau house noticed our decoration in flames," she said. “They were joined b\ men from several of the houses who ran over, pushed [he huge decoration over and smothered the flames. It’s just lucky they saw it when they did. uld have reached the house." ke all the others on the Row. lecoration was constructed inflammable crepe paper had been approved by the department.
Large W hite C ross e Pi Phi entry, on the ecoming theme. “Troydi-in Sports." depicted a laige
It c
w it Ii and
Hon
the Flapper Day Parade and! Rally in front of the Theta Xi fraternity house Friday night.
Close to 2500 students and alumni jammed the Row for the spirited parade and bonfire rally. The. police department closed 28th Street to traffic for the occasion.
Tiny Space Ships
Many rooters had balloons filled with helium gas. And these balloons, at the end of long strings, rose in the air giving the weird impression of what hundreds of tiny space ships might look like. The unusualness of the impression was further intensifi- i ed by ihe bright spotlights imported from movie studios to illuminate the parade and rally j
The annual theme of Flappei j Day was the bold and boisterous ’20s. And entries featured anti-1 que autos, the Charleston and skits ribbing prohibition days.
Too Much Duplication
Theta Xi ran the parade re-1 markably well even though it permitted twice as many entries as it should have. There was too
Rut exuberant Trojan rooters didn’i seem io care as they pushed and nudged each other} (Continued on Page Four)
Official Views Row Drinking
Dud Johnson, IFC adviser, has gone on record saying that some day he would like to see the drinking restrictions on Si"s fraternities removed.
*‘I would like to see the day come when drinking is i»er-niitted in the fraternit y houses, but I do not feel their moral standards permit it at I his time,” he said.
Johnson made this comment after Virgil Schaeffer, Phi Sigma Kappa member, presented a recommendation to form a committee to investigate the possible use of alcoholic beverages in the fraternity houses.
Dennis Fagerhult approved the committee recommendation and t he issue will be brought up again at the next IFC meeting, Thursday.
The council passed a motion to support Christmas house decorations sponsored by ATO, •Johnson said.
Double Feature Set for Reading
Undergraduate English students Jim Sousa end Rill Pitkin will compare Stephen Crane and Ernest Hemingway in the English department's Noon Readings today in 129 FH.
“We will compare the feeling, thought and style of these two authors," Sousa said.
Aim for Summit Urged by Rabbi
Tt
on t air. i Care
Thr becau detea tin
Indians rambled 339 yards, e ground and through the mipared t.o 262 for SC. The led in first downs, 21-15.
Blowing Fire > Indians, still blowing tire se of a, pair of extra point (s that has probably cost it Rose Row 1 nod. hooted every cf its extra points against
the vaunted SC Trobabes : day alternoon. 13-9, just a while before the varsity f Stanford in the Coliseum freshman game was he Rerkeley.
The SC Trobabes took an 2-0 lead when the Cubs’ Segale centered the hall n the end zone on a punt att K»vo\ »‘red Fumble
Cal came back with a s quarter touchdown and c< sion to hold a 7-2 lead ii halftime gun. .John Blaylock fast Cub left halfback, wenl yards for the score. It was by a recovered fumble. Qu back Jim Ferguson convert
The junior Golden Bears into a 13-2 lead midway i
The
we i n tl
third Ernie on a : it was
quarter, when t Reese scampered lick double revet an SC mistake tl miserable
ight 19 v
Ac;
Dr. Israel Chodos, rabbi for ; the Congregation of Sinai of Los I Angeles was the speaker for the i regular Morning Worship Service | Sunday in Rovard Auditorium. His topic was “The Quest for Self-Fulfillment.’’
In his sermon. Rabbi Chodos | urged the congregation to decide “whence you have come and whither you will go."
He said. “Man must strive to lift himself to his highest to what he is capable of doing ; the summit!"
'Ideal' is Disappearing
The Rabbi discussed the fact that the word “ideal" seems to be i hading from our modern-day vocabulary. “Recause we cannot define it in definite terms, we tend to ignore it," Dr. Chodos said.
“It is a soaring word, one that is intangible, but an ideal should be that a person strives to ful-fill the promise of his potential-1 ities." he explained.
“An ideal is a magnet which : beckons and every being must endow himself to respond, but not be driven. There should be a quest for truth, for good and for the beautiful.” he said.
“We must restore to America its soul.” he added, “and fulfill ourselves as individual human beings.”
Rabbi Chodos said we should never see ourselves as a good
been with b u t
machine that has never used. We should not stop “earthbound complacency, strive forever heavenward.”
“Life is a being and a becoming, not a having and wanting."
“Rise to the highest promise within you. Strive for. reach for a star and if you don't reach it. there may still be stardust on your shoulders,” the rabbi said. “Sanctify your lives by the most real things ideals, and nourish your hungered spirits with the great religion.”
Many Participants “And may God set me on Thy highest places, should he the ideal striven for by every person.” he concluded.
Med. Honorary
Q #s I» r
*/WUl\ J
Pre-medical students opportunity to join A!pl Ion Delta, national pre honorary, which will me day in 252 Sc.
Reouirerr.ents foe men in this society are the tio.i of 43 units and a 3 average.
“Many fine programs in~ physicians and persor inent in the medical fir*ld
,psi-
tical
hership x>mple-
) grade
featur-: promare
ig planned I I Kermit Oh
t lie
presi
future
lent.
A hustling and determined Stanford line roared through SC’s senior-less line as they might through a cube of butter.
Led by a powerful quarterback in Jackie Douglas, who Taylor ! rates every hit as good as John ■ Rrodie. the Indians ground out all of their TDs except the final one. a jump pass from Douglas to Cris Rurford shortly before the end of the third quarter.
Law Student
Douglas, a Stanford law student from Santa Monica, completed eight of 13 passes for 79 of Stanford’s 85 yards through the air länes.
The 20-year-old senior, w ho is ; also a fine tennis player, demonstrated his supurb ability on one play that led to Stanford's first TD.
A fourth down situation on SC's 10-yard line. One yard to go for a first down. Douglas rolled back to pass, all the way hack to the 20. and became hemmed in bv three separate SC players.
Scored to Si\
In hurry-up fashion, he shook off Phil Dehovsky, Rod Hurn-enuik and Walt Gurasich and scooted-to the SC six before he was finally brought down.
From this point, Rick McMillen easily stepped into the end zone on the next play giving Stanford its first six pointer.
SC was not to be denied, however, as a Willie Wood-led squad took the kick-off. roared 76-yards , in 11 plays and kicked the con-(Continued on Page Four)
the play, kick.
Final Quarter TD
A desperate Trobabe pas.« attack in the final qua: brought the or.lv touchdown Coach Marv Goux’s crew, scoring play was a three-; pass from A1 Prukop to Lu Hayes. Carl Skvarna convert Next game on the Trol schedule is UCLA, one ol weakest of the typically-^ Rrubabe teams. Le>«> than
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COMMERCE DEAN'S ECONOMIC LETTER
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Pages Ouster To Be Pondered
Lawrence C. Locklcy, dean of t^e School of Commerce, said in his monthly economic letter that in order to live a.: vvell this fall as we did last fall, we will have to have about a four per cent increase in income.
“At least that repi’esents an arithmetical conclusion." he said. “Rut there is a joker in the statement. With a lack of increased production during this period, a.id wilh an increase in population, there is not enough to go around 1o let us live just as vvell as we did last fall.” Increases Won’t Delp Dean Lockley said that any to increase consumer ! to the point that the in prices will he merely increases the if inflation and does* not the consuming position
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The only " av this can be overcome is if some consumers get an increase that others do not £;et, or if some get a greater increase than others. Then the;-, can overcome the of increasi He further ex pi is the stead.' upw ; a 20-year period ir conies that has coi
averse influ-t price ’evel. ined that it d surge over consumer in-ributed most
heavily to our inch-by-uich ui-
flation.
In line with this, the Federal ! Reserve Ranks have made money ! tighter for business enterprise without striking directly at this primary cause of inflation. The resulting slowing down of business activity will probably decrease our excessive consumer wage levels.
"Rut." he added, “it is something like trying to treat a sprained ankle In spraining the other ankle loo, so that the pa-tienl will limp evenly!” Commenting on the level of business activity this fall. Dean Lockley said there seems to have I been a prevailing sentiment of pessimism concerning the business outlook. It has become so great that during October there w as a noticeable sharp break in j the ««lock ma ket—without any apparent cause.
Almost Full Employment lie noted that there Ls practically full employment now and thei«e has l)een no tall-off to j speak of in the rate of produc- j tion Retail salts have continued ! to climb and there are many in-deations of solidity in our cur- ; rent economic scene.
“But on the oilier hand, we can sec a leveling oft in some ol our unportant diagnostic in* 1
dexes. Money is light, but been made tight by the national action of the Federal Reserve Roard.” he writes.
According to Lockley, during th. year our population increased by slightl; more than 3.000.000. Apparently a larger pooulation got along on the same volume of goods, but paid a higher price for this standard of living.
A second question raised f
Official
MoSict
All students who have deferred tuition accounts are reminded that the first payment is due on Nov. 15. except for those students registered under Public Law 550. Payments made after Nov. 15 will be subject to the $5.00 late payment fee unless an extension has been granted by the Ollice iif Deterred Tuition. < lie* t.s-and money orders tor the exact amount are acceptable by mail or in person at the Office of Deferred Tuition.
( ash payments must be made at 'he Bursar's Of fire.
it has ! Dean Lockley in his monthly lot -inter- ter Ls whether or not we can have peace in the labor field.
lie said that the rccent Senate investigating committee hearings
' have uncovered ; deal of corruption highly placed unioi through these hear I come public knovvl ery bribe paid to f officers was paid 1 tative of manager?'
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need, ostión i how a pest rife
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“More and more of the b pw.it of tiie South was seeing
ui
group of political both in the North South,” he arlrieel.
Rut even more important, according to Lockley, is that in thi.- day e>f nuclear warfare, “the United States must continue to be one nation."
Not Too Formidable
In regard to the current Sputnik scare, Dean Loci.'ey feels the launching by Russia of a iiiis-'ile took much of the news and piopaganda valu-c- out of the l.'Uiu-liiiiii.s \v e had planned ui connection with the International Geophysical Year, but that it represents no more formidable development than our own.
scie ter.
Establishes Sdencc
Refore establishing geocher istry as one of the recogniz geological sciences at CalTei in 1951, Dr. Rrown was direct of the University of Chicage Institute for Nuclear Studi« During the war he served on t plutonium project at the I nive sity of Chicago and as assista director of the Clinton I^ibor tories at Oak Ridge. Tenn.
Studies Earth's Composition
Dr. Rrown has studied the a-
composite meteorite? piling dat the Intel Year.
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